Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Revelations



         I started working as a teacher in the department of surgery at a private medical institution in my home state. A month has passed and I understood two things, relevant to situations, which I never encountered previously. First thing is related to my views about teaching in medical profession. Second thing is about hospitality and patient communication in a private setup.

          Regarding teaching as a profession, this short period has opened my eyes wide. The difficult part of teaching is not transferring the ideas, but maintaining discipline and motivating. Sometime before, I had written, that education is about making people capable of thinking at a higher level.  I developed this clarity about my profession only after some years after entering college. It is very difficult to make a young man or woman open up their mind. They remain unfocussed even after repeated advices. Taking classes for the undergraduates is very easy. I know what I am teaching. I have the experience of treating patients. I know how to conduct a good session on any topic related to my practice. But guiding the students to think out of the box, or motivating the house surgeons to go to the bottom of a treatment plan, is a herculean task. Teaching is easy, but educating is not easy. That is the feature, which keep some teachers apart from the rest. It also requires being strict with the rules. Students and house surgeons are in the constant process of thinking how to avoid responsibilities and how to disappear from the duties. The capability to motivate the students, the capability to make the students think of their own; It’s like starting a campfire from damp wood. Until it gets going by its own, one has to struggle a lot. I now realize why teaching is considered as one of the greatest professions in the human civilization.


           Second revelation was about the hospitality, while practicing in a private setup, where the patients pay for the treatment by themselves. Except for a short period as a casualty medical officer, I had always worked in government run hospitals. I had developed a reasonably good communication skill and I considered myself good at explaining about diagnosis and treatment plans to the patients and relatives. I remember most of the patients were happy with my communication. But there used to be some patients, mostly patient relatives who are unsatisfied with the logistics or discontent with the functioning pattern of the hospital facilities or staff. In such situations, I used to defend the hospital and staff pointing out how good we cared for the patient regarding the disease management. But in a private hospital a whole new realm is added to a doctor’s practice- hospitality. Now sometimes, I have to keep my pride away and talk like a customer relations manager in a showroom. I have to make them feel like; the staff in a hotel or some kind of tourist center treats them. We are not supposed to fight with them. We are not supposed to make them correct. Only thing we can do is to make them happy, make them feel they are served right and decide what they want. Now I am working on it.